Leprosy

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (22 ratings)
Leprosy album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 38:52

Write a Review 3 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Given the cassette in 1989...

Nikolai082700

When my friend bought this cassette and hated it, it wound up in my hands... I wore it out. This album was a face-smasher in 1988 and remains so today. "Pull the plug" and "Choke on it" are especially noteworthy, but the whole album kills. Download this and experience a crushing wave of Metal goodness.

user avatar

Metalbilly!

thatway57

I first listened to Death when I downloaded "The Sound of Perserverance". That is a great album so I decided to explore a bit deeper. This their second album is not as sophisticated as the later set but it has a compulsive crazed atmosphere that is addictive. This might sound strange but it almost reminds me of The Cramps. I have been playing this over and over again and I now understand what a major influence that this group was. Highly recommended.

user avatar

PULL THE PLUG!!!!!

starbearer

this album rules!!! its about TIME emusic added it!!!

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Relapse Records Radio

By Andrew Parks, Director of Merchandising

To celebrate over 20 years of releasing forward-thinking heavy music, Relapse Records has assembled a monumental playlist featuring over 70 songs from the label's eclectic catalog. From the early days of crushing death/doom metal and blistering grindcore to the present days of whirlwind tech-death, atmospheric sludge, occult rock, progressive instrumental rock and everything in between, Relapse has remained at the forefront of extreme art. Presented in the following mix are tracks from genre leaders Mastodon, Baroness… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Chuck Schuldiner gets even darker and bleaker on Leprosy, the follow-up to Death’s long-awaited 1987 debut, Scream Bloody Gore. Schuldiner recorded the album with a completely different Death lineup, but the record isn’t terribly different from its predecessor, aside from a bit more polish in the production and composition. – Steve Huey